Musee Rodin: Creating a Portrait, Rodin With his Models From 10th April to 23rd August 2009

By Prne, Gaea News Network
Wednesday, April 8, 2009

PARIS - A creative laboratory but also a social insight, the La fabrique du portrait, Rodin face a ses modeles exhibition invites you to discover the considerable but little-known work of Rodin the portraitist. It highlights the artist’s creative process and approach in building a portrait. Modelled out of the earth itself, the faces of Baudelaire, Clemenceau and Balzac appear alongside the faces of the bourgeoisie of the end of the 19th century. For this event, the museum has taken many restored pieces out of storage, some of which are being shown to the public for the first time. A totally new collection.

To view the Multimedia News Release, please click: www.prnewswire.com/mnr/museerodin/37779/

Public or private, commemorative or private, the sculptor created a great diversity of portraits throughout his career. Artists, politicians, bankers, women who were loved, women of the world, French and foreign, all faces of Rodin’s time, immortalized in material form, gathered in one single exhibition.

To achieve the physical and emotional characteristics of the subject portrayed, Rodin works the clay directly from real-life sketches or photographs. Using marble, plaster, bronze or baked clay, creating deformed necks and large foreheads, the sculptor plays with materials and scales, searching for a “cerebral anatomy”, to embody the very essence of his subject.

However, the construction of his portraits results from a wider reflection on the relationship between the particular and the general, between the type and the individual. From the model, Rodin defines a type: the lines of the face are simplified or enlarged, the detail and the particular give way to the general. To create the posthumous portrait of Balzac, Rodin uses a carter from Touraine whose features, typical of the region, evoke those of the writer for him. The face of Baudelaire is also fashioned from the face of a substitute model.

Faced with his portrait, Clemenceau said: “That’s not me”. But it’s undoubtedly in this distance between the type and the individual, between the subject portrayed and the final result that all the sculptor’s power of interpretation and symbolisation is expressed. “Clemenceau sees himself as he really is. I see him as part of his legend”, Rodin explained.

Information: www.musee-rodin.fr

Musee Rodin79 rue de Varenne, 75007 Paris.Mo. Varenne.

Closed Monday.

Open from 9.30 a.m. to 5.45 p.m

Source: Musee Rodin

Press contact: Clemence Goldberger, Tel: +33(0)1-44-18-61-86, goldberger at musee-rodin

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